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tv   CNN Heroes An All- Star Tribute  CNN  December 8, 2012 11:00pm-1:00am PST

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it's so close to us. i look forward to going back, the people i know down there and the spirit down there makes you want to come back. >> thank you. >> thanks, man nice talking to you. >> during the past hour we have seen three stars using their fame to fight the causes they believe in. they are proof that there are many ways to lend a hand. ultimately their stories remind us that giving back is its own reward. that is what cnn heroes is all about. a young girl speaks up for her right to an education and gets shot in the head, but her voice is not silenced and she inspires a movement of women. that's a hero.
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a man is found in a house with his arms tightly wrapped around his son trying to protect him as hurricane sandy swept them both away. he was a former marine. that's a hero, too. we don't build statues to these people. we may not even notice them. but they don't care about that because their actions are not calculated to gain recognition or reward. what they do is who they are. as a young marine, i was taught to help people who could not help themselves, all over the world right now people are putting this principle into action and saving lives. these heroes speak one language -- the language of humanity. there are different kindses of heroes, those who in that unforgiving minute rise to the occasion when the moment calls
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for it, daily grind-it-out heroes who wake up every morning and humbly change the world. you think you've got what it takes to be a hero. we've all asked ourselves that question. i think we do. because these heroes, they're you. just ordinary people. until they're heroes. and we need those heroes more than ever. ♪ >> announcer: ladies and gentlemen, please welcome anderson cooper. >> good evening, everyone, and welcome to cnn heroes: an all-star tribute the men, the women and the children you are going to meet tonight are taking aim at some of humanity's
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gravest challenges they come here not only to accept our gratitude but to inspire us to take action in our own lives. with us at this event, as you would expect at a fancy awards show are music you tv, sports stars, but here is the difference they didn't is didn't come to be honored. they came to generously lend their support to heroes as well as the remarkably talented harvey keitel. we want to thank them for getting involved. you can get involved tonight. you can also interact and donate on screen during the performances tonight during the show, you will see some stuff down over here, you will see some stuff over here on your screens, hopefully not right here because that's my face, that's the moneymaker. we've got ten incredible here -- heroes that we're honoring this year. later tonight, one of them is going to be named the 2012 cnn hero of the year. if there's any time left, the producers promised me this time, finally, i can sing my a cappella version of "gangnam style," fingers crossed, practicing for weeks and i have just been told there will not be
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time it for that. like many of our honorees, our first hero's story illustrates a problem hiding really in plain sight. to introduce us to her, please welcome an actor who champions many causes such as unicef and race for kids, adrien brody. >> every day so many children do the extraordinary, and most of us don't even notice. they change their mother's i.v. they clean their brother's feeding tube and check for bed sores. they dispense complex, life-saving drugs and then spend the night worrying if they got it right. in the morning, worn out and drained, they catch the bus to school. and what connie siskowski discovered is that they carry more than their heavy backpacks
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into those classrooms. they carry the burdens of home. she noticed how these adult responsibiliies impacted their school work, how they were afraid that if they asked for help at home, they would be separated from their families, and how they often dropped out of school. while others were oblivious and critical, connie knew they were strong, and she had the insight to start an organization focused on easing their burdens. and because of her work, we can now see these kids as inspiring, compassionate human beings. and we are blessed that they are hidden no more. >> there are at least 1.3 million children who are caregiving in the united states. >> you okay? >> my mom is a three-time cancer
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survivor. >> my biggest fear is finding out she's in the hospital when i get home from school. >> she might end up facedown in the backyard. >> as a result of caregiving, children sacrifice their education. they sacrifice their well-being. they sacrifice their childhood. our health care system has many gaps. families are struggling, and they don't have the disposable income to hire help at home. >> i help my mom care for my brother, isaac. i first started caring for isaac when i was 11 years old. i help my mom bathe him, feed him. i also help change his diaper, put on clothes. let's go, guys. before i got into the care giving youth project, i mainly felt stressed. >> having experienced some of
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that myself allows me to better understand what these families are going through. when i was growing up, my grandfather and i were really close, and he had congestive heart failure. i did everything for my grandfather. the night that he died, i was the one who found that he was no longer breathing and i can still feel what his skin felt like at that time. i remember i didn't cry until -- sorry. >> after the lab, we're going to go over the periodic table. >> working with the children and seeing their lives transformed makes me get up every day. our society loses if we do not support these children. >> oh, my god, look at that! >> in school we offer skills building. we offer families a home visit
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to see what other needs the families might have. >> you have a couple of steps to go up to get isaac into the house? >> yeah. >> maybe we could get a ramp built. >> that would be great. thank you so much! >> fun activities are important because it allows the child to experience a piece of childhood that they otherwise might not. >> it helps my confidence. >> i feel that they have my back. >> i want to tell the world this organization is amazing. it really helps. and it's all thanks to dr. connie. i love her so much. ♪
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>> ladies and gentlemen, it is my honor to present cnn hero connie siskowski. ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you stronger ♪ ♪ stand a little taller ♪ ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely when i'm alone ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you makes a fighter ♪ ♪ footsteps even lighter ♪ ♪ doesn't mean i'm older because you're gone ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you makes stronger stronger ♪ ♪ just me myself and i ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you ♪ >> it's no secret that the kids you just met are the real heroes. there are still too many people who don't know these children exist. thanks to tonight, many more do. now it's time to make sure that they have the support they need and that not one child drops out of school to care for loved ones. please join us to give your
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community's caregiving youth a chance. thank you. >> announcer: next on cnn heroes, viola davis and david speed. and later, josh duhamel and a live performance by phillip phillips. the johnson & johnson's campaign for nursing future is proud to sponsor cnn heroes: an all-star tribute. [ nurse ] i'm a hospice nurse. britta olsen is my patient. i spend long hours with her checking her heart rate administering her medication, and just making her comfortable. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said "someone must open the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight."
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welcome back to cnn heroes. i want to take a moment to acknowledge 32 of our heroes of past years who are in the house tonight. we're very glad that our cnn heroes family could be here with us. so thanks for being here. because of your support, they continue to do their loif-changing work. now let's go to our next honoree. nelson mandela said education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world. but in afghanistan right now the taliban have destroyed hundreds of schools, especially targeting ones that are educating young women and young girls. our next hero has refused to back down, welcoming girls inside the protective walls of the school the she herself built. to tell us about her, please welcome a proud supporter of the segue institute for learning in her hometown of central falls, rhode island, viola davis.
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>> let's remember this number -- 32 million. that's how many girls around the world are deprived of a primary school education every day. for too many, they are denied this right simply because they are girls. not allowed to learn how to read and write, add and subtract, understand science and the stars. 32 million brilliant girls told they can't reach for the heavens. that's why razia jan, a woman who embodies the word "courage" says not on my watch. we're going to change this. and after she saw the towers fall on 9/11, she did just that. she returned to afghanistan to education those girls and help
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rebuild her country. under looming threats and real danger, she opened the doors of the zaboli education center. today these students walk with their heads held high, determined to raise their voices after being silenced for too long. and greeting them each day is razia, helping each one dream and say loud and proud, i want to learn. >> i came to afghanistan, and i saw mostly desperate girls. if you see the history, the women and girls have suffered the russian invasion, the taliban, the civil war. for 30 years, the girls weren't allowed to go to school. school boys, if they try to cross the road, if they see me, they try to hit my car. they think a woman shouldn't be
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out of the house, shouldn't drive, shouldn't do anything. i thought the best thing to do was build this school and educate and start from the very bottom. >> when i started this school, my mission was to have a girls' >> when i started this school, my mission was to have a girls' school, and i was not going to change my mind under any circumstances. what they thought is that i will fail and then they can change it
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into a boys' school. and now the coins have flipped, literally. >> i mean, they are very conservative, but they are not terrorists. we still have a lot of problem in afghanistan. the girls are being threatened. the schools have been burned. they've been poisoned. if they are walking to school, they throw acid on their face. i have security for the school, but we don't have guns. >> my name is nadia.
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>> it's my honor to present cnn hero razia jan.
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>> thank you. thank you. the seed of education that was cultivated for my girls five years ago is blooming. i have great hopes and dreams for the future of afghan girls. please hold my hand and let's go together forward and help these girls. thank you very much. >> i can't watch our last hero's story without thinking of a young girl named malala yousafzai, a 14-year-old girl who was shot point-blank in the head in pakistan for speaking out in support of girls' education.
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she is recovering right now in a hospital in england. her father tells us that malala is getting better, that she is actually reading books again and that she is talking again. her father asked that i read you a message from malala tonight and she says, thank you so much for the outpouring of love and support. i thank the people who supported me without distinguishing religion and color. people have actually supported a cause, not an individual. let's work together, she says, let's work together to educate girls around the world. thank you, malala and we send our thoughts and our wishes to your continued recovery. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 let's talk about low-cost investing. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 at schwab, we're committed to offering you tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 low-cost investment options-- tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 like our exchange traded funds, or etfs tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 which now have the lowest tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 operating expenses tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 in their respective tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 lipper categories.
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in addition to the ten heroes we are saluting tonight, we are also recognizing young wonders, little kids who make a big difference. to introduce us to our first young wonder, join us in welcoming david spade. >> hey, everybody, it's great to be here at the cnn heroes event. you know's, lot of people call me a hero. not people in this room but, you know, out in the street there are. because i try to do my part in helping out with different charities. i try to do what i can. actually, i don't want to forget about our own backyard. so i've been working with some charities here in hollywood that some people don't know about. about two weekends a month, i work with a group called kids without beamers.
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and we go to beverly hills high and we give out red convertible bmws. to anyone that doesn't have one already and there were two last year. it's a great group. a great bunch of people. check our website. also, i work with some doctors, we gave out free plastic surgery and facelifts to actresses on their 25th birthday. if they can't afford it. and the other day i was walking around, i saw a girl that looked 28 and i said, why? this doesn't have to happen. there's also celebrities -- every six months, i sit with lindsay lohan and we figure out her next horrible career mistake. sometimes she starts heading in the right direction, i say, wait, trust your instincts. that's not why i brought you
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here tonight. the real reason is i'm actually going to introduce to you a very cool kid. he is the first cnn young wonder, will lorsy. look what this compassionate and brilliant kid did to try to end hunger in this country. >> one day when i drove home from a little league game, i saw homeless man with a cardboard sign that said "need a meal." so i told my mom i wanted to do something. >> will lorsy is a 9-year-old child. i hesitate to call him child, i think necessary a category of his own. as a 7-year-old, he decided he was going to take on this issue of hunger. >> welcome to frogs. >> my group is called frogs and it means friends reaching our goals and our motto is having fun while helping others. i want you to write what we can do for a spring project. >> will's big personality does not come from me. >> fire me up. pepper me.
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>> i think every time you meet will you look at him and you say, are you kidding me? but together with his buddies, they have raised over $20,000, or the equivalent of 100,000 meals for tarrant area food bank. >> how about some french baguettes? from india. these peaches are a delight. >> when you see somebody who gets so engaged and gets so much of the community engaged, it's an endorsement of the battle we fight to end hunger. >> where is will, by the way? where is will? will, stand up, will you? right over there. amazing. he is 6. by the time he is 12, we are all going to be working for him. i guarantee you. throughout tonight's broadcast, check out our live blog at cnn.com/backstage.
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we have got exclusive behind the scenes videos, got instagram photo, celebrity tweets. i will be tweeting as well. you can sign in from facebook, twitter, other social media at cnn.com/backstage and you can do that online, on your mobile device, even from the cnn ipad app. now back to our heroes. addiction is no stranger. many of us are touched by its turmoil, whether it's addicts, ourselves or watching loved ones caught in the cycle. it's a force to be reckoned with and our next hero has found a way to channel its destructive power into the healing power of sport. to share his triumphant story is a racial hero who, through example, shows the same perseverance and drive. please welcome the founder of the jeff gordon children's foundation, the amazing jeff gordon.
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>> recovery from alcohol and drug addiction is never ending work. it takes strength and resolve to rise up and out of that despair. scott strode has been there. when he was in his early teens, he started drink and taking drugs to mask his pain. as he got older, he made so many wrong turns that one morning, he woke up on the bathroom floor and knew that one day, his mother might find him there. and would be unable to stir him. in that heartbreaking moment, scott realized that he had to rise up and take control of his life or he was never going to be the person he wanted to be. so he began that recovery. he gave it all up, the drinking, his friends and influences that went along with his life in addiction. and when he looked around, he was all alone. so he found a community through sport. then he did what heroes do, he built his own community, a safe, sober place where others could rise up, too.
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he did that not just to become a better boxer or climber or runner, but to become the man he always dreamed he could be. >> one, two, three. when you're really getting after it, climbing on your bike, throwing the bars back and forth, or when you're hanging off a rope, your hands are all pumped, you can barely hold on, something happens. you're there in that moment, everything else melts away. and you're just there. it can fill that void that the drugs and alcohol left. in my recovery from a life of addiction, i did a lot of intense sports. i ended up racing triathalon, eventually i raced iron man. it just changed my self-esteem, started thinking of myself as an athlete instead of an addict.
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having that experience myself, it made me realize i could give this to other people. and that's where phoenix started. phoenix isn't a formal treatment program. we're not a replacement for 12 step or therapy. but it's crucial, i think. it gives people a community and it gives them positive coping mechanisms and it gives them a way to redefine themselves as something other than an addict. on any given day, i can look out the back door and see somebody in the throes of their addiction. and i think, how do we get them from that side of the fence into this building? addiction really does strip away our dreams and phoenix is just a vehicle for people to see what they're really capable of. you got it! pull through. nice job, tiffany. >> i'm very grateful to scott for creating this community. a month after i got sober my dad died, and this was the one place i knew that it was okay, that people cared if i was sober. it was like my -- my second family.
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>> tiffany is, like most of our team members, they walked through some tough stuff in their life. and she just has this courage. it's scary to pass through personal pain or difficulties in our life, to face those things. it inspires me. i think when you come to phoenix it allows to you let go of some of that shame from your drug use and be whatever you want. you can become a climber, you can become a boxer and later on, you become a good friend and a good son. i think there's a hook to these sports, but we're not just replacing one high for the next. as we shift that self-esteem, you learn how to overcome adversity. it's transformative to stand on top of a mountain.
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from those heights you can see something in yourself that you can't see from down here and the more time you go up there, you realize that eventually you don't even need the mountain anymore. it's something in your heart and that's when you can really walk away from who you were as an addict and you can walk away proud. >> ladies and gentlemen, it is my honor to present cnn hero scott strode. >> thank you. sadly, i've seen too many people lose their lives to addiction. i myself could have died over 15 years ago from my own drug and alcohol use.
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i think of that when i think of the 23 million americans and who knows how many worldwide who are struggling with this disease. i believe that together we can help them rise from the ashes, and who knows what gifts they'll bring to this world. thank you. >> announcer: coming up, phillip phillips performs live and later jane lynch and olympic gold medalist cullen jones.
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welcome back, our first musical performance is a song that could easily have been written about our heroes tonight, working each day to provide love and care and safe haven to those in need. performing "home," here's phillip phillips. ♪ hold on to me as you go ♪ ♪ as we roll down this unfamiliar road ♪
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♪ and although this wave is stringing us along ♪ ♪ just know you're not alone ♪ ♪ 'cause i'm gonna make this place your home ♪ ♪ settle down, it will all be clear ♪ ♪ don't pay no mind to the demons they fill you with fear yeah ♪ ♪ the trouble it might drag you down ♪ ♪ if you get lost you can always be found ♪ ♪ just know you're not alone 'cause i'm gonna make this place your home ♪
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♪ oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ settle down it will all be clear ♪ ♪ don't pay no mind to the demons they fill you with fear ♪ ♪ yeah ♪ ♪ the trouble it might drag you down ♪
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♪ if you get lost you can always be found ♪ ♪ just know you're not alone ♪ ♪ 'cause i'm gonna make this place your home ♪ ♪ say no, no, no, no, no, oh, say no, no, no, no, oh ♪ ♪ now oh, oh, oh oh ♪ ♪ now oh, oh, oh oh ♪ >> announcer: next on "cnn heroes: rainn wilson, miranda cosgrove and later, a live performance by ne-yo.
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welcome back. f. scott fitzgerald said, show me a hero and i'll write you a tragedy. one of the things i find so inspiring about our heros is many have faced tragic circumstance and they've transformed their grief into action to help others. our next hero dealt with death and now brings life into our world. to tell us how one woman can truly make a great change in the
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world, please welcome a proud supporter of the mona foundation which promotes early education, particularly for girls in underdeveloped countries, rainn wilson. >> anderson cooper, my personal hero. for some people, no matter how blessed their lives have been or how much hardship they've endured, they cannot ignore a problem that surrounds them and breaks their hearts. catalina escobar is this kind of woman. she lives in one part of colombia, the part with nice houses, loving families, food and medicine. but she also saw the other part of the country, the place where teen mothers and their babies live in shacks, with hunger, illness, violence, and where children die too often simply because a young mother could not afford medicine.
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this daily preventable tragedy was something catalina refused to ignore so she started the juan felipe gomez escobar foundation, named for her son. her organization provides women and babies with proper medical care and a place for them to become independent and break this crippling cycle of poverty. it seems impossible that one woman should take on a problem so big, but there is nothing more powerful than a mother with a mission, born from the sorrow of holding her deceased son. >> when you go around in cartagena, you find such a beautiful city. but then five minutes away, there's little kids are living without anything at all. >> i used to be a banker, and i was very comfortable, actually. but i cannot be successful if i don't make other people happy around me. the year 2000 i started volunteering at this hospital. a baby was in my hands, and he passed away. and it was a preventible death. that life could have been saved
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just for $30. period. my own son died, juan felipe. he was 14 months old. he died because of an accident but not because he lacked resources. no mother in the world should go through that process just a because they don't have the
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money to cover treatments. when you bury your own son, you start being part of those women's souls. and in 2002 we built an intensive care unit in the hospital. we've saved more than 3,000 babies. but then you discover the problem was bigger. most of these babies come from teenage pregnancies. and many of these girls are sexually abused. >> we have to invest in these girls. otherwise, they're going to remain in the cycle of poverty forever. it took us two and a half years to do all the fund-raising, to build the social setup. but now every day 1,000 moms and babies come to our center and they're here for free. they drop their babies at the day care center so they can come and get all the skills. when you give them the skills to
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become socially productive, they don't need prostitution to earn money. we have worked with 2,000 girls. the only thing we ask for them is to give the best of themselves. >> it is my honor to present cnn hero catalina escobar. >> being here is not a personal achievement. but for the thousands of teenage moms in the poor slums in cartagena, colombia, they are my real, true heroes and the little fighters, the babies, whose lives we have saved.
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i am only the person who helps them on their path from misery to dignity. thank you. >> please welcome a proud supporter of st. jude children's research hospital, miranda cosgrove. >> just imagine you have cancer. every day you go to the hospital for treatment. you see others just like you being poked and prodded with needles during chemo. but, unlike you, they have to stay. but because you're a young wonder, you find compassion where others might wallow in their misfortune. you are jesse res, you're sadder
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greater than most. you are so sick and still, you give the kids something to smile about, true joy in a car. >> jesse was 11 when she was
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diagnosed with a brain tumor. jessie was outpatient, so every day, we would get in the car and drive up to children's hospital of orange county and drive home. one day, we were leaving and she just simply asked us, when do all the other kids come home? what can she do to help them? >> kind of found an empty jar somewhere and she started stuffing things in it. >> put like a green turtle, and a slash ball. >> maybe a car? >> a car? >> yeah. >> and that's how the joy jars got birthed. she clearly knew the impact it was making in these kids lives as she was giving them their joy jars. she was very particular about what would go in the jars. it had to be something cool. it couldn't be cheap and flimsy. >> people from all around the united states who were following her story were hey can we get some for our friends that have a child fighting cancer and then it just exploded. >> do you know how many people are helping? why are you doing that? why not make it about you? >> i just wanted to make them happier. because i know that they -- they are going through a lot, too. >> when jess lost her battle with cancer on january 5, 2012,
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she was 12 years old. ♪ so shine bright tonight ♪ >> it's joy for jesse day. >> since jesse's passing we have sent over 27,000 joy jars. >> it's what she started and it's what we will continue to do. >> what makes jesse a young wonder is she cared and in the midst of a world that says focus on yourself, it's all about you, she said, no, it's not. shine bright like a diamond ♪ this is olivia. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. what i really need is sleep. introducing the ishares core building blocks for the heart of your portfolio. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. read and consider it carefully before investing. risk includes possible loss of principal.
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this is olivia. she's the love of my life and is almost 13. you know, she's the first thing that i really truly loved and took care of. i was 39 years old. i just had done best in show and fell in love with every dog i met and i was also in therapy,
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surprise, and your therapist said you should get a dog. i don't think i could be married today, and i don't think i would have the friendships that i have and relationships that i have and i am so thankful to this little girl for opening my heart, and i take care of her and she takes care of me. >> jane lynch is right. we love our dogs, us dog lovers. this is my dog, actually, molly. she has the stinkiest breath you can possibly imagine. it's like a squirrel has crawled inside her and died, but i still love her.
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our next hero found an innovative way to partner rescue dogs with people that really need help. the 2 million soldiers deployed, 1 in 5 returns with a disorder. here is jane lynch. >> in the united states military there's a saying "i've got your 6." that means don't worry, i got your back. for our veterans that struggle with the invisible wounds of war that feel isolated with the affects of ptsd and depression and have to fight to get the care they need and to fight the urge to commit suicide, mary cortani's got their backs in a
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profound way. not because she is a veteran, too, but because she finds these men and women a loyal and loving companion that helps them put their lives back together. three years ago she started matching veterans in need of a service dog with a shelter dog in need of a home. and let me tell you it's a soul full joy. when they go out in the world, the dog can sense if the veteran is fighting a flashback, becoming overwhelmed with the sounds, and anxiety. the dog calms, the dog watches, and the veteran knows who's got their 6. >> these are two of my friends, really close friends of mine. they were killed in action. being an infanryman, we are trained to see everything. if i don't see something, somebody can die. coming back to the everyday civilian life, reality didn't make sense anymore. when i find myself walking, i'm scanning at threats that could
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happen in iraq. who is behind that corner? what is sitting on that balcony? it feels like you are drowning. i thought suicide might have been the best answer. things got better for me when i did meet mary cortani. >> awesome. awesome. what i want you to do is you're going to close your eyes, you're safe. you've got them with you. i'm up here. try to match their breathing. operation freedom paws takes dogs from shelters to rescue groups and matches them with the disability. for somebody having an anxiety attack, they can sense that and nudge that, give a hug, break the cycle. inform. >> yes, yes. >> if your hand is like this, there's still tension, unnecessary tension. >> olivia just wants to check everything out. >> what characteristics in shadow made you think he would be a good dog for david in particular? >> there's a young energetic man in there that needs a dog that is going to bring out that fun and kid in him again.
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>> yeah. >> and let him realize that there is some joy. >> your ust in the world is strengthened with the dog and it sounds like it's getting better. >> he is learning to see the world through the dog. >> through the dog. >> she called me up and said, hey, i have your dog. and i show up and there's shadow, he's running around in the building, you know. i knelt down with him and he sat in front of me, you know. you know, and i -- i hugged the dog. i felt like that piece i was missing was right there. that's why what she does is so vital. she saved my life. you know?
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>> we want to be able to help as many men and women with disabilities as we can. let's stop the suicide. let's get them the help they need. love heals. love does. especially when it has a wet nose and four paws and a wagging tail. >> please join me in honoring cnn hero mary cortani. >> this award is not about me. it is about the men and women who so gallantly serve this country and come home injured. we need to do more to let them know that we care.
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that's what operation freedom paws is all about. thank you, nicky, and my ofp family. >> if you would like to make a donation to any of this year's top ten cnn heroes, you can go to cnn.com to do that. and through december 31st, google is waiving all transaction fees to make sure every dollar that you donate goes to the heroes nonprofits. it's been almost two decades since apart hide ended in africa. and 18 years later, seven of ten children live in poverty, and our next hero took matters into his own hands.
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reigniting what his countrymen fought for so many years ago. here to illuminate his story is a musician who pledged to feed a billion people in africa using a proceeds from the sale of his energy drink. please welcome 50 cent. >> it's not easy to start out at the bottom. in that neighborhood that sits on the shadows of a thriving city, shacks as far as the eye
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can see, water carried in buckets. and when you start with so little it's hard to dream about something better. thulani madondo lacked everything except the desire to climb out of the shadows. when he looked down he knew the ladder needed to reach higher. he started an after-school program that gives 400 kids the confidence to climb out of the shadows and feel the warmth of opportunity, and not just in the big city but in the very place they call home. >> there are 45,000 people, without most of the basic things such as electricity, schools or
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clinics. my mom with three sisters slept in the bed while all of us boys would sleep on the floor here. i never had a school uniform. i never had pocket money or lunch boxes. my vision when we started the program was it was going to be a place where children would get assisted with their homeworks as well as food. but not just that. a place where they would take it as a home. >> this is our library. we've got grade 12, and grades in each class. we have three other grades in each class. ♪ >> kyp members' performance at
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school have increased because of the tutor. >> they have confidence and take the lead. >> one thing i tell the children is that children always tell themselves that they are poor because you may be poor in terms of material and wealth but still be rich inside. i am what i thought i wanted to be. >> i am a pilot! >> i am a doctor. >> i am a police. >> i am a fashion designer. >> i am an actor. >> can you imagine the impact we have if one of the student from the community went to get their university degrees and got good jobs. >> i am an engineer. >> i am a teacher. >> being able to help young
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people who have never had the opportunity is what i wanted. i never got it, but i was fortunate to help other people get it. it makes me feel good. >> and it is my honor to present the cnn hero thulani madondo. >> at kyp we feel so grateful that we can help change the lives of hundreds of children living in shacks. having grown up there ourselves, we know the daily struggles and
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we know the challenges. for us we have a saying, pull up your own socks, it's a privilege to teach it to the children but even a greater gift to see them doing it. thank you.
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>> one afternoon as part of her >> one afternoon as part of her research a young college student went to speak with the women imprisoned in a katmandu jail. while she was talking through the bars, she began to feel something tugging on her clothes. pushpa basnet looked down and saw a tiny hand clutching the fabric, and then the unexpected eyes of a beautiful little girl, this child wouldn't let go and neither could pushpa.
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she couldn't live with the fact that in nepal if a parent is convicted and there's no trustworthy guardian to be found, then often the best option for the child is to go to prison with her parent. so pushpa has devoted her life to helping these kids. she created the butterfly home where older children live, go to school, and receive medical care. she also started a day care for the children still too young to leave their parent and walks them every day to and from the prison to a place where they learn to read, draw, and imagine. these boys and girls are loved, and they love pushpa, their mamu.
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>> maybe god has sent me to do this thing. we are traveling to a small jail, three hours drive to cat man due. katmandu. you have people there with different crime, like drugs, trafficking, and so now the mother has just called us to come and pick up the child. she said that i am in a prison for drug trafficking. i am scared now that i am in prison, the circle of my friends will traffic my daughter.
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>> freedom. i give them the freedom from the prison. that's the greatest thing i can give them. i get up around 5:30. we are a family. you are not just dealing with one child, you are dealing with 44 children with 44 various behaviors.
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every child deserves a good life. we give them education, food, love. this is the most precious time for them, and they are spending it with me. just imagine how lucky i am. >> it is my honor to present cnn hero pushpa basnet.
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>> these children have not done nothing wrong. they are simply got something they do not understand. we want to work with the government to bring them all out from the prison, and they deserve a better future. this work is the only thing for me and with your support we can keep going. thank you. i was five years old when my what is that? it's you! it's me? alright emma, i know it's not your favorite but it's time for your medicine, okay? you ready? one, two, three. [ both ] ♪ emma, emma
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bo-bemma ♪ ♪ banana-fana-fo-femma ♪ ♪ fee-fi-fo-femma ♪ ♪ em-ma ♪ very good sweety, how do you feel? good. yeah? you did a really good job, okay? [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you from johnson & johnson. [ woman ] ring. ring. progresso. i just finished a bowl of your new light chicken pot pie soup and it's so rich and creamy... is it really 100 calories? let me put you on webcan... ...lean roasted chicken... and a creamy broth mmm i can still see you. [ male
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announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup. i was five years old when my parents wanted to take me to a water park. i was really excited. but unfortunately i never had swim lessons. but my dad had to get on the biggest ride there and me looking up to him i wanted to follow suit. i pushed off, but unfortunately when i got to the bottom of the ride i flipped upside down. my mom tells the story best, she heard her only child screaming and having a good time and then nothing. she came in to try to save me, but unfortunately she was not comfortable in the water either, and she began to drown at the bottom of the pool. my dad had to dive in and got my mom and the lifeguard came and got me.
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a child can drown in 20 seconds, and i was under for 30, and that day changed my life forever. >> the little boy in that story grew up to become two-time olympic gold medalist in swimming, cullen jones. like our next hero, he's dedicated himself to make sure all kids, especially african-american children, learn how to swim through his work with make a splash in the usa swimming foundation. please welcome cullen jones. >> six years ago on a beautiful day a boy named josh grabbed a raft and drifted out onto a lake. as he rested there in the summer sun he didn't know he had floated out to where the water was too deep. when the raft flipped over, josh was in trouble. he didn't know how to swim. this 16-year-old boy filled with so much promise drowned.
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wanda butts grieved her son morning, noon and night. and after a year she was determined to turn her son's tragedy into triumph. to it try to make sure this doesn't happen to any other. so she had an idea. teach the boys and girls in toledo, ohio, how to swim. i can't tell you how thrilling it is to see these boys and girls walk on the edge of a swimming pool, they jump in, and because of wanda they aren't afraid of the water anymore. they feel safe. they can kick, move, break the surface and breathe. >> i believe that swimming is a basic life skill. but i learned that too late. i lost josh on august the 6th 2006.
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he was special. josh was my peach. my son drowned. as a child, i was never taught about the dangers of water. my parents didn't talk about it. no one in our community ever talked about it. so i never learned, and i never taught josh. african-american children are three times more likely to drown than white children. that's a problem. drown something a sign of death. and i had enough of the silence. who wants to learn to swim today? i started the josh project to teach kids how to swim. my daughter, my two grandsons and i were the first four students, and now over 1,200 children have gone through the josh project.
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no more expensive lessons. no more telling our kids not to get their hair wet. no more excuses. all right. you doing okay? i want to reach every child in every school, and every church. i even invited cullen jones to come and speak to my kids. >> not learning to swim is definitely something that is generational in the african-american community. i see myself in these kids. i still remember how it felt when i almost drown. that's why i feel the josh project is so amazing because it sheds a lot of light on what can happen. >> i want these kids to teach their kids, to learn to swim. part of my life's journey is losing my own fear of water.
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i'm going to do it. i think the most important part of cullen jones' story is that he got to grow up. i love hearing what these kids want to be when they grow up. >> a navy s.e.a.l. >> a teacher. >> a lifeguard. >> josh didn't get to grow up, but he's with me every day. >> good job! >> ladies and gentlemen, my cnn hero, my hero, the new comfortable swimmer, my other mom, miss wanda butts.
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>> first i must thank god for the opportunity and the privilege to be here today. my hope is that all children are taught to swim and to be safe in and around the waters. our responsibility as adults is to give them this basic life skill. my son, josh, is my hero, because his life gave my life meaning. next sunday would be his 23rd birthday.
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happy birthday, josh, i love you. thank you. >> please welcome the supporter of the one word kid charity, rico rodriguez. >> by working together we can solve problems, even big ones. this is what a young wonder does. they look at a problem in a creative way and say i'm going to fix this, and that is exactly what cassandra lynn did. she had this amazing idea and she brought three things together, concern for the environment and families that needed to heat their homes and restaurant leftover cooking oil. it's genius. and there's no reason this can't be done all over the world tomorrow. so check this out. >> when i was young i heard about global warming and i knew there was huge consequences for this problem, so i got together with my friends and we found out you actually could turn waste
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cooking oil into biodiesel fuel, because many families in my hometown could not afford to heat their homes, i thought maybe we could use the recycled cooking oil to heat their homes. we made a difference and so can you. >> we were just worried about keeping our kids warm and having heat and hot water. it was a major relief. >> i was trying to talk about biodiesel and could not get anywhere with it, and she came along and did it to get restaurants to recycle their grease. the fact that it was coming from kids hit harder, the child shall leave them sort of thing. she set the example for the town.
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and it's great that westerly has a person that we can be proud of and tell the rest of the country. >> if everybody gave a little something back and took a little time out of their day to do something for others, the world would be a better place. >> next, maria bello honors a haitian hero and later ne-yo performs live. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] pop in a whole new kind of clean. with tide pods. a powerful three-in-one detergent that cleans. brightens.
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and fights stains just one removes more stains than the 6 next leading pacs combined pop in. stand out.
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our next hero comes from a country that's always in my heart, haiti.
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nearly three years has passed, and haiti is still dealing with the aftermath of the earthquake that killed so many. hundreds of thousands of haitians still live in makeshift camps where safety, especially for women, is a very real concern. like a lot of stories coming out of haiti, this one is difficult to hear and it may be inappropriate for some young viewers, but it's a story that needs to be told. please welcome maria bello. >> in the language of creole, there is a term. it means the center pillar of the house. and this is what haitian women are. they're the breadwinners, the
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teachers, the caregivers all across the beautiful country i call my second home. malya villard-appolon knows this. not just because that's what she is for her family but also for thousands of women and children who have survived the atrocities of rape and domestic violence. i have seen firsthand how lives are transformed because of the extraordinary work of malya and her team. it's inspiring to be with you and josie, to hear from reginald and michelle. all of the women there and the children that witness how haitian women know what haitian women need. they need someone who comforts them in the hospital, files complaints with the police, and recruits young men to be security guards and patrol the camps. someone who hands out whistles and brings flashlights to the darkest places to keep the
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rapists and criminals away, someone like malya, a pillar of strength, working with dignity to build respect for women under haiti's blue sky. ♪
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♪ ♪ i want to sing ♪ ♪ i want to shout ♪ ♪ i want to scream 'til the words dry out ♪ >> it's my honor to present my friend, cnn hero, malya villard-appolon.
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[ speaking creole ] [ speaking creole ]
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>> three words have marked me -- women, strength and pride, which my friend embodies so fiercely. when i say women, think of all the women who stood up to say no to violence. when i say strength, find it no matter what to help the victims. this is what we feel when we feel pride every time we do the work that we do. malya would like to say thank you because without the support of madre and our other partners, we wouldn't be here today. thank you so much. merci. >> merci. incredibly inspiring story. car crashes -- you may not know this -- are the number one cause of death for teenagers in the united states, and one-third is
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alcohol related. the next hero is laying down a life-saving challenge to those in montana. here to introduce our next hero is someone who helps keep young people alive through his support, josh human elle. duhamel. ♪ >> hello. under montana's big sky in the city of butte, there's a road with a white fence, and along that fence you'll find a cross that bears the name mariah, and it is only a block from where she lived and it marks the place where she was walking with friends when a drunk driver hit and killed this wonderful 14-year-old girl. sometimes you might see her father, leo mccarthy, there on bended knee, leaving some
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flowers, decorating the spot with jack fr jags with jack-o'-lanterns on halloween or wiping a tear. leo started mariah's challenge, a scholarship for students who pledge not to drink before they are 21 and never get in a car with anyone who has been drinking. so far 8,000 young people have taken this pledge. it shows how a young father's grief can bring more than tears. it can bring change to a city, a state, an entire generation of young people. >> my town is butte, montana. it has a great history of hard living. the rite of passage here of drinking seems to start in teenage years.
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that culture has continued even when our society has changed. >> good job! >> mariah was so full of fun. october 27, 2007, mariah was 14. she was plowed over by a drunk driver. our innocence was changed, and the town's innocence was changed. >> the kids i talk to around montana is seventh grade to senior in high school. if they take mariah's challenge, we will give them money for college or a trade school. >> i am the voice of mariah's challenge. mariah is the face of mariah's challenge. but the live willing face, the breathing face are you people.
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it's about you changing a culture. you know, this nation we lose somebody every 15 minutes to alcohol-related fatalities. and what is so unbelievable, it can change. >> well, first, we need to start with the weekends. that's the hardest part. you're just home alone, and there's that temptation. i think the best that we can do is, like i said before, lead by example. >> it's a great feeling to have youth come up and say, i am mariah's challenge. >> you just give like a lot of courage to me. thank you. >> be strong, okay? you're my hero. >> i know she's smiling. i think she would be damn proud of it. i will do mariah's challenge until we don't need it. if it can change here, it can happen anywhere else.
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>> it is my honor to present cnn hero, leo mccarthy. >> i am just one dad who loved his daughter with all his heart. mariah's challenge is saving lives across montana, and i don't see why it can't be done around the world. talk to your kids. let's change the culture and
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keep these promising, smart, funny, vibrant kids alive. we need them. thank you. next, ne-yo performs before we announce the 2012 hero of the year. [ tylenol bottle ] me too! and nasal co [ tissue box ] he said nasal congestion. yeah...i heard him. [ female announcer ] tylenol® cold multi-symptom nighttime relieves nasal congestion. nyquil® cold and flu doesn't. ♪ ♪ [ ding! ] losing your chex mix too easily? time to deploy the boring-potato chip decoy bag. then no one will want to steal the deliciousness. [ male announcer ] with a variety of tastes and textures only chex mix is a bag of interesting. >> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity and turn your life upside down.
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>> hi. >> hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, your money and ruining your reputation. that's why you need lifelock to relentlessly protect what matters most... [beeping...] helping stop crooks before your identity is attacked. and now you can have the most comprehensive identity theft protection available today... lifelock ultimate. so for protection you just can't get anywhere else, get lifelock ultimate. >> i didn't know how serious identity theft was until i lost my credit and eventually i lost my home. >> announcer: credit monitoring is not enough, because it tells you after the fact, sometimes as much as 30 days later. with lifelock, as soon as our network spots a threat to your identity, you'll get a proactive risk alert, protecting you before you become a victim. >> identity theft was a huge huge problem for me and it's gone away because of lifelock.
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>> announcer: while no one can stop all identity theft, if criminals do steal your information, lifelock will help fix it, with our $1 million service guarantee. don't wait until you become the next victim. you have so much to protect and nothing to lose when you call lifelock now to get two full months of identity theft protection risk free. that's right, 60 days risk-free. use promo code: gethelp. if you're not completely satisfied, notify lifelock and you won't pay a cent. order now and also get this shredder to keep your documents out of the wrong hands-- a $29 dollar value, free. get protected now. call the number on your screen or go to lifelock.com to try lifelock protection risk free for a full 60 days. use promo code: gethelp. plus get this document shredder free-- but only if you act right now. call the number on your screen now!
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our final performance is a fitting anthem for our show, and here to perform "heroes," three-time grammy award winner, ne-yo.
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♪ never doubt, never doubt, here for you, here for me ♪ ♪ worry not ♪ ♪ i'll be there, strength when you feel weak ♪ ♪ in the dark when you can't see ♪ ♪ guiding light, i will be ♪ ♪ all i need, all i need ♪ ♪ is for you to do the same for me ♪ ♪ cuz even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ and even the strong need someone to tell them it's all right ♪ ♪ even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪
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♪ just look up ♪ ♪ up so high ♪ ♪ just above you is where i fly ♪ ♪ but if i fall from the sky, on you can i rely ♪ ♪ i will protect you from the world whenever i can ♪ ♪ but will you do the same for me now and again ♪ ♪ oh, because even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ and even the strong need someone to tell them it's all right ♪ ♪ even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪ ♪ come to my rescue ♪
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♪ do for me as i do for you ♪ ♪ be my eyes when i am blind ♪ ♪ 'cause no one can be strong all the time ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ oh, even the strong needs someone to tell them it's all right ♪
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♪ even heroes need heroes sometimes ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪ ♪ oh will you be my hero tonight ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪ ♪ will you be my hero tonight ♪ [ applause ]
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coming up, we reveal the 2012 cnn hero of the year.
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welcome back. cnn has awarded each of our incredible top ten heroes $50,000 to carry on their inspiring work. in addition, the foundation which is a leading supporter of non-profits wodwide is graciously providing this year's honorees with free training, including practical guidance on fund-raising, communications, management and more. now we gave you the opportunity to go to cnn.com and vote for the hero of the year, and more than 5 million votes were cast around the world and all of our heroes received an immense amount of support. the hero of the year will receive an additional $250,000 grant to continue their work. it is my great honor tonight to announce the 2012 cnn hero of the year. the 2012 cnn hero of the year is pushpa basnet.
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♪ ♪ >> thank you so much. this award means a lot to me, and still a lot of children living in the prison, and definitely mum will take you out of the prison and you are coming to my place.
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and this is for my children and this is going back to my country, nepal. thank you so much for those of you who voted for me and believed in my dream. thank you. >> i want to invite all of our honorees back onstage. all of our cnn heroes from this year. these heroes stand tall against abuse, against injustice, against inequality. please continue to help their causes by donating at cnnheroes.com. i hope some of tonight's stories have inspired you to bring more good to the world, and you, too, can be somebody's hero. thank you and good night, everybody. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com hello,
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